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Announcements

Date post: 02-Jan-2016
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Announcements. Next week – no lab Wednesday evening Lab closes 5pm for Biol 203 exam Lab will be open Tuesday 5-10 pm Biol 204 notes www.usask.ca Biology Class notes -- Biol 204 – kaminskyj 2004 lectures. Cytoplasmic migration in tip growth. Fungal cell walls. Thin Fiber reinforced - PowerPoint PPT Presentation
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Announcements • Next week – no lab Wednesday evening – Lab closes 5pm for Biol 203 exam – Lab will be open Tuesday 5-10 pm • Biol 204 notes www.usask.ca – Biology – Class notes -- Biol 204 – kaminskyj – 2004 lectures
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Page 1: Announcements

Announcements

• Next week – no lab Wednesday evening– Lab closes 5pm for Biol 203 exam– Lab will be open Tuesday 5-10 pm

• Biol 204 notes– www.usask.ca– Biology– Class notes -- Biol 204 – kaminskyj– 2004 lectures

Page 2: Announcements

Cytoplasmic migration in tip growth

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Fungal cell walls

• Thin• Fiber reinforced

– Taxonomically relevant

• Plastic/extensible at tip

• Elastic/inextensible at maturity

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Wall vesicle exocytosis at Saprolegnia hyphal tip

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Hydrophobins

• Without hydrophobins, hyphae cannot break through the surface tension of water

• Hydrophobins are essential for mold sporulation and mushroom formation

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Hydrophobin rodlets

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Diverse features of Protista (P), Chromista (C), Eumycota (F)

• Walls in vegetative phase– Lacking (P)– Having (C, F)

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Diverse features of Protista (P), Chromista (C), Eumycota (F)

• Walls in vegetative phase

• Mode of nutrition (always heterotrophic)– Ingestive (P)– Absorptive (C, F)

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Protistan fungi – three taxa

• Myxomycota – “acellular” slime molds

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Dictyosteliomycota – cellular slime molds

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Plasmodiophoromycota – endoparasitic slime molds

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Common features of Protistan fungi

• Nutrition by ingestion– Possible because vegetative stages do not

have walls

Page 13: Announcements

Common features of Protistan fungi

• Nutrition by ingestion

• Lifestyle – Individual cells or colonies– Dictyosteliomycota -> Alternating individual

and colonial stges

Page 14: Announcements

Common features of Protistan fungi

• Nutrition by ingestion• Lifestyle

– Individual cells or colonies

– Alternating individual and colonial stges (Dictyosteliomycota)

• Sexual reproduction by spore formation– Only walled stage– Fibrils of peptidoglycan, cellulose, chitin

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Myxomycete plasmodia

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Physarum – nuclear behaviour

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Myxomycete plasmodia can distinguish nonself and self

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Physarum on heterogeneous substrate – food preference

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Myxomycete spores in sporangia

Physarum Stemonitis

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Myxomycete spore walls contain peptidoglycan

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Dictyosteliomycota – “cellular” slime molds

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Dictyostelium

Aggregation of amoebae uses chemical signals

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Dictyostelium cell differentiation model system

www2.mrc-lmb.cam.ac.uk

Page 25: Announcements

Dictyostelium spore walls contain cellulose

niko.unl.edu

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Plasmodiophoromycota – endoparasitic slime molds

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Plasmodiophora in cabbage root hair

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Plasmodiophora resting spores

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Chromistan fungi – Oomycetes

• Saprobes, parasites/pathogens

Page 30: Announcements

Chromistan fungi – Oomycetes

• Saprobes, parasites/pathogens

• Obligate parasites – must have a living host to complete life cycle – aggressive

• Facultative parasites – parasitism is optional – less aggressive

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Saprophytes and facultative parasites

Asexual zoospores ofAchlya biusexualis

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Attachment, infection, colonization

• In nature, infective stage is motile flagellated zoospores – primary and secondary

• Heterokont flagella• Zoospores find a food

source by chemotaxis

Page 33: Announcements

Attachment, infection, colonization

• In nature, infective stage is motile flagellated zoospores – primary and secondary

• Heterokont flagella

• Zoospores locate a food source by chemotaxis

Page 34: Announcements
Page 35: Announcements

Attachment, infection, colonization

• In nature, infective stage is motile flagellated zoospores – primary and secondary

• Zoospores find food a source by chemotaxis

• Attachment is followed by shedding flagella

• Infection requires growth of a penetrating hypha

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Saprophyte attachment and germination

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1° zoospore

1° cyst

2° zoospore

2° cyst

germinationandinfection

Morphology and parasitic aggressiveness

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Parasitism

The joy of slime

Page 40: Announcements

Oomycetes as plant pathogens Phytophthora infestans

www.scisoc.org/feature/lateblit/chapter1/epidemic.htm

Page 41: Announcements

Understanding late blight

• disease attributed to – excess water in the plants, – effects of the newly

introduced steam locomotives

• Reverend M.J. Berkeley– Early 1850’s– Fungal pathogen

Page 42: Announcements

Phytophthora sporangia and zoospores

www.scisoc.org/feature/lateblit/chapter1/epidemic.htm

Drier soils -> direct germination

Wet soils -> zoospores

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Social consequences of Phytophthora infestans riots, eviction, emigration

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Sexual spores of oomycetes

Major significance in genetic recombination -> development of new pathotypes

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Next time:it’s not easy being green


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